Lakota Woman

Lakota Woman

by

Mary Crow Dog

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Leonard Crow Dog Character Analysis

Leonard Crow Dog, Mary’s husband, was the American Indian Movement’s (AIM’s) spiritual leader. Leonard came from a family with a history of resistance against the U.S. government’s efforts to oppress Native American people. In fact, Leonard’s father, Henry Crow Dog, prevented Leonard from being taken to one of the many Christian boarding schools where Native American children were forced to give up their cultural traditions and assimilate to white society. This is why Mary believes Leonard was untouched by the “white-man intellectualism” that may have diminished his “unique, original” thinking or his extensive knowledge of Lakota cultural traditions. Because of Henry’s resistance, Leonard was brought up to be a traditional medicine man, and it was in this role that Leonard aided many Native Americans in reconnecting with their heritage. Leonard was the spiritual leader of AIM, which meant that he participated in many of AIM’s historic demonstrations, such as the Trail of Broken Treaties and the Occupation of Wounded Knee, where he revived the Ghost Dance. A strong advocate for intertribal unity, Leonard often hosted Lakota ceremonies—such as the Sun Dance—and allowed Native Americans from other tribes to join. After the Occupation of Wounded Knee, the U.S. government persecuted Leonard for his activism and imprisoned him on a phony charge. Leonard’s friends and family (including Mary) rallied together to raise support and awareness to secure Leonard’s release, which stands as testament to the power of unified efforts when fighting for justice.

Leonard Crow Dog Quotes in Lakota Woman

The Lakota Woman quotes below are all either spoken by Leonard Crow Dog or refer to Leonard Crow Dog. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Activism and Resistance Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1 Quotes

The Crow Dogs, the members of my husband’s family, have no such problems of identity. They don’t need the sun to tan them, they are full-bloods—the Sioux of the Sioux […] They have no shortage of legends. Every Crow Dog seems to be a legend in himself, including the women. They became outcasts in their stronghold at Grass Mountain rather than being whitemanized. They could not be tamed, made to wear a necktie or go to a Christian church. All during the long years when practicing Indian beliefs was forbidden and could be punished with jail, they went right on having their ceremonies, their sweat baths and sacred dances.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog
Related Symbols: Christian Churches
Page Number: 9-10
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

Leonard always thought that the dancers of 1890 had misunderstood Wovoka and his message. They should not have expected to bring the dead back to life, but to bring back their ancient beliefs by practicing Indian religion. For Leonard, dancing in a circle holding hands was bringing back the sacred hoop—to feel, holding on to the hand of your brother and sister, the rebirth of Indian unity, feel it with your flesh, through your skin. He also thought that reviving the Ghost Dance would be making a link to our past, to the grandfathers and grandmothers of long ago.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog, Wovoka
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

Beside being tumbled headfirst into this kind of situation, still in my teens, with a brand-new baby and totally unprepared for the role I was to play, I still had another problem. I was a half-blood, not traditionally raised, trying to hold my own inside the full-blood Crow Dog clan which does not take kindly to outsiders. At first, I was not well received. It was pretty bad […] [Henry Crow Dog] told me that, as far as he was concerned, Leonard was still married to his former wife, a woman, as he pointed out again and again, who could talk Indian.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog, Henry Crow Dog
Page Number: 176
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

But always, always I felt, and was enraptured by, [Leonard’s] tremendous power—raw power, spiritual Indian power coming from deep within him. It was raw because, never having been at school and being unable to read or write, there is no white-man intellectualism in him. At the same time, his thinking and ideas are often extremely sophisticated—unique, original, even frightening.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog
Page Number: 200-201
Explanation and Analysis:

In May 1974, Old Henry and Leonard put on a Ghost Dance […] It was supposed to be a ritual for Sioux only, but somehow, through the “moccasin telegraph” which always spreads news among Indians in a mysterious way, everybody seemed to know about it, and many native people from as far away as Alaska, Canada, Mexico, and Arizona suddenly appeared in order to participate.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog, Henry Crow Dog
Page Number: 212
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

[Leonard Crow Dog] could not understand why the government was after him. He did not consider himself a radical […] He thought himself strictly a religious leader, a medicine man. But that was exactly why he was dangerous. The young city Indians talking about revolution and waving guns find no echo among the full-bloods in the back country. But they will listen to a medicine man, telling them in their own language: “Don’t sell your land, don’t sell Grandmother Earth to the strip-mining outfits and the uranium companies. Don’t sell your water.” This kind of advice is a threat to the system and gets you into the penitentiary.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog (speaker)
Page Number: 216
Explanation and Analysis:

With all that information pouring in upon Merhige, the judge began feeling twinges of conscience. He called us to his court in Richmond. A long trestle table in front of his bench was piled two feet high with petitions on behalf of Crow Dog. The judge pointed to this mass of papers, saying with a grin, “This is just the tip of the iceberg. We don’t have enough space in this courtroom to bring them all out. We have letters here from Nigeria, Java, Greece, Japan, Sweden, Peru, and Austria. I just wonder how folks so far away can know more about this case than we do.” Then he said in a low, matter-of-fact voice: “I resentence Crow Dog to time served. I order his instant release.”

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Judge Robert Merhige (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog
Page Number: 239
Explanation and Analysis:
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Leonard Crow Dog Quotes in Lakota Woman

The Lakota Woman quotes below are all either spoken by Leonard Crow Dog or refer to Leonard Crow Dog. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Activism and Resistance Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1 Quotes

The Crow Dogs, the members of my husband’s family, have no such problems of identity. They don’t need the sun to tan them, they are full-bloods—the Sioux of the Sioux […] They have no shortage of legends. Every Crow Dog seems to be a legend in himself, including the women. They became outcasts in their stronghold at Grass Mountain rather than being whitemanized. They could not be tamed, made to wear a necktie or go to a Christian church. All during the long years when practicing Indian beliefs was forbidden and could be punished with jail, they went right on having their ceremonies, their sweat baths and sacred dances.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog
Related Symbols: Christian Churches
Page Number: 9-10
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

Leonard always thought that the dancers of 1890 had misunderstood Wovoka and his message. They should not have expected to bring the dead back to life, but to bring back their ancient beliefs by practicing Indian religion. For Leonard, dancing in a circle holding hands was bringing back the sacred hoop—to feel, holding on to the hand of your brother and sister, the rebirth of Indian unity, feel it with your flesh, through your skin. He also thought that reviving the Ghost Dance would be making a link to our past, to the grandfathers and grandmothers of long ago.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog, Wovoka
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

Beside being tumbled headfirst into this kind of situation, still in my teens, with a brand-new baby and totally unprepared for the role I was to play, I still had another problem. I was a half-blood, not traditionally raised, trying to hold my own inside the full-blood Crow Dog clan which does not take kindly to outsiders. At first, I was not well received. It was pretty bad […] [Henry Crow Dog] told me that, as far as he was concerned, Leonard was still married to his former wife, a woman, as he pointed out again and again, who could talk Indian.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog, Henry Crow Dog
Page Number: 176
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

But always, always I felt, and was enraptured by, [Leonard’s] tremendous power—raw power, spiritual Indian power coming from deep within him. It was raw because, never having been at school and being unable to read or write, there is no white-man intellectualism in him. At the same time, his thinking and ideas are often extremely sophisticated—unique, original, even frightening.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog
Page Number: 200-201
Explanation and Analysis:

In May 1974, Old Henry and Leonard put on a Ghost Dance […] It was supposed to be a ritual for Sioux only, but somehow, through the “moccasin telegraph” which always spreads news among Indians in a mysterious way, everybody seemed to know about it, and many native people from as far away as Alaska, Canada, Mexico, and Arizona suddenly appeared in order to participate.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog, Henry Crow Dog
Page Number: 212
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

[Leonard Crow Dog] could not understand why the government was after him. He did not consider himself a radical […] He thought himself strictly a religious leader, a medicine man. But that was exactly why he was dangerous. The young city Indians talking about revolution and waving guns find no echo among the full-bloods in the back country. But they will listen to a medicine man, telling them in their own language: “Don’t sell your land, don’t sell Grandmother Earth to the strip-mining outfits and the uranium companies. Don’t sell your water.” This kind of advice is a threat to the system and gets you into the penitentiary.

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog (speaker)
Page Number: 216
Explanation and Analysis:

With all that information pouring in upon Merhige, the judge began feeling twinges of conscience. He called us to his court in Richmond. A long trestle table in front of his bench was piled two feet high with petitions on behalf of Crow Dog. The judge pointed to this mass of papers, saying with a grin, “This is just the tip of the iceberg. We don’t have enough space in this courtroom to bring them all out. We have letters here from Nigeria, Java, Greece, Japan, Sweden, Peru, and Austria. I just wonder how folks so far away can know more about this case than we do.” Then he said in a low, matter-of-fact voice: “I resentence Crow Dog to time served. I order his instant release.”

Related Characters: Mary Crow Dog (speaker), Judge Robert Merhige (speaker), Leonard Crow Dog
Page Number: 239
Explanation and Analysis: